Returning to the Jungle:

The extraordinary 11thC ruins of Preah Khan Kompong Svay lie about one hundred kilometres from Angkor Wat, and are not to be confused with the other Preah Khan in Siem Reap (famous to some as the location of Tomb Raider.)
The Kompong Svay Preah Khan is one of the last completely unrestored major Khmer monuments- a vast tumble of towers and pillars and lintels, badly looted during the time of the Khmer Rouge, when gangs drove in from Thailand to rob the site of its statuary.
I spent the night camping just outside main gate & woke to hear hornbills, parakeets, bee eater & mynahs chattering & had breakfast amid iron slag, from medieval weapon manufacture- this was the base from which Jayavarman VII marched to expel the Cham from Angkor in 1181.
But the site is much older than that. The temple was originally built as a shrine to Lord Shiva by Suryavarman I, and a 10thC Sanskrit inscription records its original foundation:
"The dance of the God who has the moon for his diadem (Shiva), the play of the tips of whose glorious feet cause the earth to shake and tremble in the eight directions, a dance which causes Indra, God of the Winds, to whirl and moan..."
... because of the vigorous arms which cause the palaces of the Gods to sway, a dance which renders space insignificant with garlands of shooting rays from the splendour of his nine modes of dance (erotic, furious, heroic, odious, comic, pathetic, marvellous, terrible& peaceful)
May his dance which brings joy and does honour to Brahma and other Gods be propitious to us."
The famous statue of Jayavarman as Lokeshvara/Avalokitesvara was found amid the rubble of here. It is now in the National Museum in Phnom Penh.
It is one of the great masterpieces of Khmer sculpture, arguably THE great masterpiece, but it's also a strangely and brilliantly contradictory piece.
Like Ashoka & Akbar, Jayavarman VII was a ruthless & hugely successful military man who, full of remorse, turned in middle age into a religious figure who advocated peace & reconciliation who foreswore the sword. The artist recognises this, and yet shows both sides of the man.
The King is presented as a humble worshipper, head lowered with eyes closed in deep and profound meditation. Yet the worshipper still has the powerful physique of a man trained for combat and his expression is full of charisma and strength.
This meditating king may be a man of the spirit, but he is still very much the ruler who conquered and subdued much of Southeast Asia and moulded it to his iron will, leaving behind him more and greater monuments than any other ruler in Cambodian history.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with William Dalrymple

William Dalrymple Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @DalrympleWill

2 Dec
In 615CE, the same year sculptors in Afghanistan began work on the second Bamiyan Buddha & just as the Sui dynasty was collapsing in China, in the N Cambodian kingdom of Chenla a Shaivite monarch named Ishanavarman I began work on a capital called Ishanapura, the City of Shiva.
Ishanapura in time became by far the largest urban centre in the region. Today it is known as Sambor Prei Kuk.
The city was built on an impressive scale: the southern temple complex, one of three, measured 300 by 270 m. Sunken tanks were accessed by steps.
Today, many of the bricks temples Isanavarman constructed are now overgrown and returning to the forests that surround them
Read 14 tweets
1 Dec
The written history of Cambodia seems to begin in the Mekong Delta at the trading ports  of Angkor Borei, Tak Eo, and its counterpart just over the Vietnamese border, Oc Eo.
Here, in the rainy season,  a network of canals flood into a wide, sweet-water lagoon that  strongly resembles the lagoon of Venice and which leaves the higher hills, like the early temple site of Phnom Da, as conical islands in the stream.
This lagoon became in the 1st century CE, the terminus for a trade route leading Eastwards to India, Persia & the Roman Red Sea ports & Westwards towards China. The Chinese called this area Funan; the Indians, Vyadhapura. We do not know what it was called by its own inhabitants
Read 19 tweets
28 Nov
The Dawn of History in Southeast Asia

This inscription is arguably the oldest written document is the history of Southeast Asia and intriguingly, it starts with what seems to be an outrageous fib.
The inscription is one of seven carved on sacrificial Vedic yupa posts, which strongly resemble menhirs, erected by a King called Raja Rajendra Mulavarman around 400CE. Here the Mahabharat is invoked by the Raja who has made a sacrifice in the Kutei region of Borneo.
Mulavarman compares himself to Yudhistra of the Mahabharat and says he defeated his enemies and made them pay tax. He also claims to have brought many Shaivite Brahmins from India into his kingdom.
Read 11 tweets
22 Nov
Prambanan is the 9thC royal temple complex of the Sanjayas of Mataram, situated immediately beneath the acropolis of their palace on the outskirts of modern Yogyakarta.
Its an extraordinary rich and sophisticated group of temples
Despite being overwhelmingly Shaivite in orientation,Prambanan contains one of the very earliest and most perfect representations in stone of the Ramayana, which, perhaps surprisingly, is more complete than any surviving cycle of similar date in India.
Read 4 tweets
21 Nov
Candi Plaosan & Candi Sewu
Two exquisite complexes of mid 9thC Buddhist temples near Yogyakarta.
They were built by Sri Kahulunnan or Pramodhawarardhi, the daughter of Samaratungga, descendant of Sailendra  Dynasty, and who was married to Rakai Pikatan of the Hindu Sanjaya dynasty.
The confluence of these two great Javanese dynasties produced these remarkable masterworks.
Read 8 tweets
19 Nov
Borobudur, begun around 825, is the quite simply the largest Buddhist temple in the world. It is decorated with around 500 statues of Lord Buddha, arranged in terraces of decreasing size, as if on the sacred slopes of Mount Meru.
It was built possibly by the Sangramadha Nanjaya Sailendra dynasty of Mataram, Central Java, or maybe “charismatic religious leaders rather than kings.” For surprisingly there is no great temple or palace complex associated with it.
The only inscription associated with Borobudur dates from 842 and is from a woman who gave land to sustain it. For all the mystery, this is the climax of the ninth century golden age of Java, when so many remarkable monuments were built here, both Hindu and Buddhist.
Read 12 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(